August 16, 200421 yr I loooove V.C Andrews. I'm only on her third book but I bought the whole series at a used bookstore so I own them all. :cool: Stephen King and Dean Koontz are cool too. And I'll try not to set the geek alarm off but I love Shakespeare too :confused:
August 16, 200421 yr Author I loooove V.C Andrews. I'm only on her third book but I bought the whole series at a used bookstore so I own them all. :cool: Stephen King and Dean Koontz are cool too. And I'll try not to set the geek alarm off but I love Shakespeare too :confused: i've never had the chance to read any of her novels... any recommendations to start off with?
August 16, 200421 yr I would start with Flowers In The Attic which is her first. It's a super book. I think you would like it :D
August 16, 200421 yr Author I would start with Flowers In The Attic which is her first. It's a super book. I think you would like it :D yea... that is definitely her most popular one... I just always forget about it when looking for a new book to read. But someday soon I will check it out
August 16, 200421 yr I don't think many guys pick it up because the title makes it sounds like a sissy girl book. :lol:
August 16, 200421 yr Author I don't think many guys pick it up because the title makes it sounds like a sissy girl book. :lol: you may be right about that jess... I'm still very curious about it though since i've heard praise about it many times
August 16, 200421 yr You know that saying about not judging books by their covers? :smug: It applies to this book :P
August 16, 200421 yr My fav Virginia Andrews is My Sweet Audrina. Its the only one of hers that I know of which isn't part of a series.
August 17, 200421 yr Its one of the better ones because it was actually written by Virginia Andrews. I stopped reading the later series because I didn't think they were as good once someone else started writing when she died.
August 17, 200421 yr Yeah and it's stupid how other people kept writing under her name..it's like, just don't make any more books :idea2:
July 26, 200916 yr Ancient thread. But I was wondering if anybody has read Ayn Rand's stuff. She is slowly changing my life.
July 26, 200916 yr I read John Galt's speech in Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead. She has a wonderful philosophy, I just don't think she is logically consistent by supporting government. If you're going to believe that taxation is theft (which it is!), you need to go the full distance and become an anarcho-capitalist. The fear many libertarians/objectivists have with anarchy, is they don't believe society would remain stable without a government. Two economists, Ludvig von Mises and Murray Rothbard, have dealt a serious blow to this commonly accepted thinking. If you study Austrian economics, you see that the State is actually a detriment to society, and laws (which were originally intended to protect our rights) are primarily used to abrogate them. Governments are meant to protect us from violence, but the police generally only clean up after you've been murdered - they don't actually prevent the murder. Your odds of being killed in a terrorist attack are less than being struck by lightning. Standing armies are unnecessary today with the invention of nuclear weapons (for deterrence), yet the US still has one, and still uses them to invade other nations. Overall, government is a bad deal. You're giving up 50% of your income for... relatively little. And your odds of being attacked for non-violent "crimes" is increased dramatically.
July 26, 200916 yr I have to agree with everything you said there. Didn't know specifically about Austria, interesting. But yes, Rand's views on goverment, administration, economics are quite inconsistent and contradict themselves often.. she's also not a great novelist, her characters are somewhat one-sided and irrational (though the language is often beautiful). But I've learned through many years of reading (as I'm sure many have) to take just away what I find significant from each novel, essay, etc I read, and I love Rand's view on how people should live their lives, her humanism and sense of the glory of human achievement. it really is inspirational..without being corny most of the time.
July 27, 200916 yr I've heard great things and brief summaries of atlas shrugged and Ayn Rand's philosophy. I plan on tackling it this Fall.
July 27, 200916 yr Ooh, enjoy. I might suggest reading The Fountainhead first, see if you like it, Atlas Shrugged is really, really long.
August 2, 200916 yr I'm told Atlas Shrugged is a must read, I just haven't gotten around to reading it.
August 2, 200916 yr We read Anthem in English this past year. After reading it my whole class, aside from myself, was convinced that any form of Egoism is evil, and we should all strive to be fucking communist Altruists. They didn't even understand the basic concept of the book. Poor literary analysis FTL.
August 5, 200916 yr We read Anthem in English this past year. After reading it my whole class, aside from myself, was convinced that any form of Egoism is evil, and we should all strive to be fucking communist Altruists. They didn't even understand the basic concept of the book. Poor literary analysis FTL. Same scenario with me, was your teacher under 30?
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